xEvents Custom Searchhttps://philevents.org/search/topic/634
xEvents Custom Search[Today - Tomorrow] Conference or similar: The Legacy of Wittgenstein, Anscombe, & Their Oxbridge Contemporarieshttps://philevents.org/event/show/66902
Venue: 620 Michigan Ave NE<br /><br /><p>Wittgenstein and the &ldquo;Oxbridge&rdquo; philosophers made important contributions to the philosophy of language, action theory, philosophy of mind, ethics, and political philosophy. On the hundredth anniversary of Elizabeth Anscombe's birth, we take this opportunity to reflect on her legacy and that of her contemporaries.</p>
<p>This conference welcomes papers on a variety of topics related to the work of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Elizabeth Anscombe, and their Oxbridge contemporaries (e.g. Peter Geach, Anthony Kenny, and Philippa Foot) and their influence on other philosophers.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/66902[ February 28, 2019 - March 2, 2019] Conference or similar: Lugano Undergraduate Philosophy Conference 2019https://philevents.org/event/show/67630
Venue: Via Giuseppe Buffi 13 <br /><br /><p>CALL FOR PAPERS<br>for undergraduate philosophy students<br><br>Lugano Undergraduate Philosophy Conference 2019<br><br>Dates: February 28 - March 2, 2019<br><br>Keynote speakers:<br>Kathrin Koslicki (University of Alberta)<br>Thomas Sattig (University of Tuebingen)<br><br>Abstract length: up to 650 words<br><br>Submission deadline: January 28, 2019</p>
<p><br>Topics: analytic theoretical philosophy, broadly construed, ancient and medieval philosophy<br><br>Submissions should be prepared for blind review and should be&nbsp;<br>submitted to garand@usi.ch<br><br>All speakers will receive a contribution to their expenses of 100 CHF.&nbsp;<br><br>While all talks will be in English, submitted abstracts and papers may be in English, Italian, German, Spanish, French, or Latin. Questions should be sent to the same address as the submissions.<br><br>MAP website:&nbsp;https://www.usi.ch/en/map<br><br>Facebook page:&nbsp;https://www.facebook.com/usimap/</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67630[ March 1, 2019] Talk or similar: Consequence theoretic semantics and entailmenthttps://philevents.org/event/show/69614
Venue: Old Arts<br /><br />Speakers at this event: <br />David Ripley (Monash University )<br /><br /><p>Dave Ripley (Monash) will present "Consequence theoretic semantics and entailment" at 11 in Old Arts 152 on 1 March.</p>
<p>Abstract: The purpose of this talk is to present and begin to articulate an alternative to both model-theoretic and proof-theoretic semantics: consequence-theoretic semantics. On this approach, both proofs and models are mere technical auxiliaries, without any direct connection to meaning. Meaning is rather located in the consequence relation itself. The key theoretical notion I will use, borrowing from Greg Restall, is that of a position---a collection of assertions and denials. Some positions are ruled out, and others are not.</p>
<p>On this basis, a consequence-theoretic semantics, like any semantics, owes (among other things) an account of entailment. But while consequence is a matter of ruling out, entailment seems to be a matter of guaranteeing or ruling in; it's not immediately obvious how to use a position-theoretic framework to understand entailment. This talk shows how to do it, by developing a notion of equivalence between positions, and using this to understand when assertions and denials can be implicit in a position. Seen this way, entailment and consequence might have the same extension, or they might not; it depends on what structural features consequence itself has. I'll show a few examples of this dependence.</p>
&nbsp;https://philevents.org/event/show/69614[ February 28, 2019] CFP for publication or other deadline: nullhttps://philevents.org/event/show/67118
Publication Name: New Developments in Legal Reasoning and Logic: From Ancient Law to Modern Legal Systems<br /><br /><p>Call for Papers:</p>
<p><strong>New Developments in Legal Reasoning and Logic</strong></p>
<p><em>From Ancient Law to Modern Legal Systems</em></p>
<p>We (Shahid Rahman, Matthias Armgardt and Hans Christian Nordtveit Kvernenes) would like to announce an edited volume in the '<em>Logic, Argumentation and Reasoning</em>' series by Springer that will contain papers stemming from &lsquo;<em>Logic, Law and Legal Reasoning</em>&rsquo;, a workshop in UNILOG 2018 (6th World Congress on Universal Logic), but will also contain other papers with a relevant topic. It will be reviewed and we hope that you might be interested in participating to this publication. The publication should discuss new insights in the interaction between logic and law, and more precisely the study of different answers to the question:</p>
<ul>
<li><em>What role does logic play in legal reasoning?</em></li>
</ul>
<p>It will present both current challenges and historical perspectives in the relation between logic and law. The perspectives to be discussed involve (but is not restricted to)&nbsp;the interface of the following studies:</p>
<ul>
<li>Foundational studies:</li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Logical Principles and Frameworks,</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Meaning,</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Reasoning in Deontic Contexts.</em></li>
<li><em>Applications:</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Legal practice and Computer-Based Modelisations,</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Argumentation Theory</em></li>
<li><em>Historical perspectives:</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Legal reasoning in Ancient Roman,</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Arabic,</em></li>
<li><em>-&nbsp;Jewish and Far-East contexts.</em></li>
</ul>
<p>The submissions should contribute to the development of those perspectives by the discussion of subjects such as:</p>
<ul>
<li>Analogical Reasoning in Law</li>
<li>Deontic Logic and Law</li>
<li>Non-Monotonic Reasoning and Law</li>
<li>Defeasible Reasoning and Law</li>
<li>Argumentation Theory within Legal Contexts</li>
<li>Epistemic Logics and Law</li>
<li>Joergensen's Dilemma</li>
<li>Hypothetical Reasoning and Law</li>
<li>Proof-Theory and Legal Reasoning</li>
<li>Reliabilty, Epistemic Logics and Legal Reasoning</li>
<li>Probability and Legal Reasoning</li>
</ul>
<p>Submission instructions:</p>
<ul>
<li>The editors will be Shahid Rahman, Matthias Armgardt and Hans Christian Nordtveit Kvernenes.</li>
<li>All submissions should be sent to&nbsp;<a href="mailto:nordtveitkvernenes@gmail.com">nordtveitkvernenes@gmail.com</a>.</li>
<li>There are no particular restrictions on the length of the submissions.</li>
<li>Submissions will be reviewed by a panel.</li>
<li>The deadline for submissions is 28. February.</li>
</ul>
<p>Best regards,</p>
<p>Shahid Rahman, Matthias Armgardt and Hans Christian Nordtveit Kvernenes</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67118[ February 28, 2019] CFP for publication or other deadline: nullhttps://philevents.org/event/show/69510
Publication Name: Special issue of Theoria: Context, Cognition and Communication <br /><br /><p>The theme of the special issue revolves around issues of representing contexts and context-dependence, the theory of concepts and the theory of abstract objects. We invite papers related to these topics, falling in the areas of philosophy of language, metaphysics and ontology, philosophy of action, philosophy of mind, epistemology, natural language semantics and pragmatics, cognitive science, theoretical linguistics, semiotics (as understood in the Morris-Carnap tradition), formal philosophy and philosophical logic.<br><br>The purpose of the issue is, first, to enhance dialogue between philosophers working in different areas of philosophy, logicians, linguists and cognitive scientists, and, second, to discuss as many aspects of the phenomenon of context dependence, the theory of abstract objects and the theory of concepts as possible. The topics may include, but are not limited to, the issue of formal representations of context and conversational dynamics, topics in logic and semantics of indexicals and demonstratives, the theory of abstract objects, the theory of abstract concepts, the theory of conceptual spaces, the analysis of the concept of background knowledge, the problem of the roles of context in pragmatic inferences, the motivations for classical and non-classical approaches to mental and linguistic contents, the impact of contexts on propositional attitude attributions.<br><br>We are especially interested in foundational philosophical questions and issues. In order to submit the paper one is kindly asked to:<br><br>1/ submit the paper via the ScholarOne site available on the Theoria&rsquo;s website, 2/ send the copy of the paper (along with a brief info about the author(s)) to the guest editors:<br><br>taci@uw.edu.pl and pagrab@gmail.com<br><br>All submitted papers will be double-blind peer reviewed.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69510[ March 1, 2019 - March 3, 2019] Conference or similar: Thinking and Beinghttps://philevents.org/event/show/66766
Venue: 1100 E 57th Street<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/66766[ March 1, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Perspectives on content (ICSO V)https://philevents.org/event/show/68962
<p>The Buenos Aires Linguistics and Philosophy of Language Group (BA-LingPhil) and the Argentinian Society for Analytic Philosophy invite researchers and scholars in Philosophy of Language, Linguistics, Logic and Philosophy of Mind to submit a paper for the workshop on Perspectives on content to be held in Buenos Aires in May 29-31, 2019.<br><br>The notion of content is central to philosophy of language, formal semantics, linguistics, philosophy of mind, and logic, and thus provides for an interesting interface between these disciplines. In recent years, these fields have witnessed an increased interest in several debates concerning the notion of content, including, but not limited to:<br><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Truth-conditional (at issue) and non-truth-conditional (non-at issue) content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Factual, evaluative, normative and expressive content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Structured and unstructured propositions<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Intensional and hyperintensional notions of content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Aboutness and subject matter<br><br>The BA-LingPhil group welcomes contributions on these, and other, topics regarding this central notion.<br><br>Confirmed speakers:<br><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Stefano Predelli (University of Nottingham)<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Mark Richard (Harvard University)<br><br>Submissions should include two files, to be sent to icsoworkshop@gmail.com:<br><br>1. one containing a title and a 750-word abstract of the paper for assessment<br>2. the other containing title of the paper, author&rsquo;s name, institutional affiliation and e-mail.<br><br>Submissions will be blind refereed by a scientific committee.<br><br>Deadline for reception of submissions:&nbsp; March 1st, 2019 <br>Communication of acceptance/rejection: March 15, 2019<br><br>Language of the workshop: English<br><br>Organizing Committee: Eduarda Calado, Ramiro Caso, Sof&iacute;a Checchi, Eduardo Garc&iacute;a Ram&iacute;rez, Federico Jaimes, Nicol&aacute;s Lo Guercio, Eleonora Orlando, Andr&eacute;s Saab, Mat&iacute;as Verdecchia.<br><br>For further information, you may check the ICSO workshops website:<br><br>https://sites.google.com/view/icsoworkshop<br><br>Or you may contact us at icsoworkshop@gmail.com.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68962[ March 5, 2019 - March 7, 2019] Conference or similar: Masterclass on Anti-Exceptionalism about Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/70182
Venue: Palazzo del Broletto, Piazza della Vittoria,15<br /><br /><p><strong>IUSS Philosophy Masterclass<br></strong><em> Epistemology of Mathematics and Logic Project </em></p>
<p>IUSS/UniSR PhD in Cognitive Neurosciences and Philosophy of Mind <br>NEtS Centre @ IUSS Pavia <br>www.iusspavia.it- www.nets.iusspavia.it</p>
<p>In collaboration with the <em>Anti-Exceptionalism About Logic Project</em>, University of Bergen</p>
<p><strong>Ole Hjortland</strong> (Unibversity of Bergen)- <em>IUSS Visiting Scholar</em><br><strong> Benjamin Martin&nbsp;</strong>(University of Bergen) </p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Anti-Exceptionalism about Logic </strong></p>
<p><em>March 5-7, 2019</em></p>
<p><em><br></em></p>
<p>i)<strong> Lecture I</strong> (March 5, 14:00-16:00, Room 1.14)</p>
<p> Session One: <em>What is logical exceptionalism?</em><br> Session Two: <em>Early anti-exceptionalism</em></p>
<p>ii) <strong>Lecture II</strong> (March 6, 16:00-18:00, Room 1.15)</p>
<p>Session One: <em>Contemporary anti-exceptionalism</em><br>Session Two: <em>Looking at logical methodology</em></p>
<p>iii) <strong>Lecture III</strong> (March 7, 11:00-13:00, Room 1.14)</p>
<p>Session One: <em>Abductivism &amp; selection criteria</em><br>Session Two: <em>Challenges to anti-exceptionalism</em></p>
<p>The historical consensus is that logic is special in some sense. For example, that logical laws are both formal and general in a way that other laws are not, and that logical knowledge is immediate and non-inferential in a way that other knowledge is not. Yet, it is now recognised there are significant problems facing logical exceptionalism, due both to general philosophical concerns over apriori sources of evidence, and exceptionalism&rsquo;s failure to accommodate actual logical practice. In response to these concerns, logical anti-exceptionalism proposes that the special nature of logic and its laws have been significantly exaggerated. In this masterclass we provide an overview of the debate between exceptionalism and anti-exceptionalism: we outline the ways in which logic has historically been considered special, explain how past and current versions of anti-exceptionalism challenge this view, and discuss the challenges facing anti-exceptionalism.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/70182[ March 7, 2019 - March 9, 2019] Conference or similar: Anti-Exceptionalism and Pluralisms: from Logics to Mathematicshttps://philevents.org/event/show/70418
Venue: Palazzo del Broletto, Piazza della Vittoria, 15, Pavia<br /><br /><p><strong>Anti-Exceptionalism and Pluralisms: from Logics to Mathematics</strong><strong><br></strong><br><em><strong>Joint&nbsp; IUSS - Bergen - COGITO Conference</strong></em><br><br>March 7-9, 2019<br><br><em>School of Advanced Studies IUSS Pavia</em><br><em>IUSS/UniSR PhD program Cognitive Neurosciences and Philosophy of Mind</em><em></em><em><br></em><em>NEtS Center @ IUSS Pavia</em><em><br></em>www.iusspavia.it-&nbsp;www.nets.iusspavia.it<br><br><br><em>Jointly organized by:</em><br><br>IUSS Pavia (Epistemology of Mathematics and Logic Project)<br>Bergen University (Anti-exceptionalism about Logic Project)<br>COGITO Research Centre, Bologna<br><br>With the kind collaboration of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Turin.<br><br><br><u><strong>Conference Program</strong></u><u><strong><br></strong></u><br><strong></strong><strong>Thursday, March 7</strong><strong><br></strong><br>14.30-15.30<br>Florian Steinberger (Birkbeck College London)<br><em>Norms of reasoning</em><br><br>15.30-16.30<br>Filippo Ferrari (University of Bonn), Sebastiano Moruzzi (University of Bologna)<br><em>In what sense, if any, is the normativity of logic a threat for anti-exceptionalism?</em><br><em><br>Coffee break</em><br><br>17.00-18.00&nbsp;<br>Sindre&nbsp;S&oslash;derstr&oslash;m (University of Bergen)<br><em>Logic and correct reasoning</em><br><br><strong>Friday, March 8</strong><br><br>10.30-11.30<br>Pilar Terr&eacute;s Villalonga (University of Barcelona)<br><em>Linear logic and the inferential role of pragmatically enriched vocabulary</em><br><em><br>Short break</em><br><br>11.45-12.45<br>Gil Sagi (University of Haifa)<br><em>Logicality and natural language</em><br><br><em>Lunch break</em><br><br>14.30-15.30<br>Maria Paola Sforza Fogliani (IUSS Pavia)<br><em>Who watches the watchmen? Anti-exceptionalism, revisability and the methodology of logic</em><br><br>15.30-16.30<br>Vincenzo Crupi (University of Turin)<br><em>Theory-choice in logic: a view from philosophy of science</em><br><em><br>Coffee break</em><br><br>17.00-18.00<br>Jessica Wilson (University of Toronto)<br><em>Abduction and logical anti-exceptionalism</em><br><br><strong>Saturday, March 9</strong><br><br>9.30-10.30<br>Ole T. Hjortland (University of Bergen), Benjamin Martin (University of Bergen)<br><em>Varieties of anti-exceptionalism</em><br><em><br>Coffee break</em><br><br>11.00-12-00<br>Andrea Sereni (IUSS Pavia), Maria Paola Sforza Fogliani&nbsp;(IUSS Pavia), Luca Zanetti&nbsp;(IUSS Pavia)<br><em>The bad, the good, and the pluralist, or: nothing exceptional about abstraction</em><br><br>12.00-13.00<br>Graham Priest (University of Melbourne / CUNY)<br><em>Mathematical pluralism and logical pluralism</em><br><br><br>***<br><br><strong>Organized by:</strong><br>Andrea Sereni (IUSS Pavia)<br>Sebastiano Moruzzi (COGITO Bologna)<br>Ole T. Hjortland (Bergen)<br><br><strong>Local organizing committee:</strong><strong><br></strong>Andrea Sereni (IUSS Pavia)<br>Maria Paola Sforza Fogliani (IUSS Pavia)<br><br><strong>Workshop venue:&nbsp;</strong><strong><br></strong>Scuola Universitaria Superiore IUSS Pavia<br>Palazzo del Broletto<br>Piazza della Vittoria, 15<br>27100, Pavia<br>Italy<br><br><strong>Room<br></strong>Sala del Camino, 3rd floor<br><br><strong>Registration<br></strong>Attendance is free, everyone is welcome.<br><br><strong>Info<br></strong>andrea.sereni@iusspavia.it, mariapaola.sforzafogliani@iusspavia.it<br><br>________________________________________________<br><br>How to reach IUSS:<br>http://old.iusspavia.it/eng/index.php?id=40#.WwpVL7aPEWo</p>
<p>Everyone is invited.&nbsp;</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/70418[ March 8, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Bergen Workshop on Logical Disagreementshttps://philevents.org/event/show/69122
<p>BERGEN WORKSHOP ON LOGICAL DISAGREEMENTS</p>
<p>University of Bergen, 28th-29th May 2019</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Confirmed speakers:</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Roy Sorensen (Washington University, St. Louis)</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Catarina Dutilh Novaes (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Catrin Campbell-Moore (Bristol University)</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Call for papers:</strong></p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;</strong>We invite submissions for 45-minute presentations, with additional time for discussion, on the broad topic of logical disagreements, addressing questions including, but not limited to:</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Are logical disagreements possible?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Are there distinct types of logical disagreements?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Can logical disagreements ever be resolved?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How have historical logical disagreements been resolved?</p>
<p>Submissions should take the form of anonymised 1,000-1,500 word abstracts, and be sent to <a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no">benjamin.martin@uib.no</a> by the 8th March. Contact details, including paper title, affiliation and email address, should be submitted as a separate PDF. All submissions will be blind refereed.</p>
<p>The workshop has no associated registration fee, but speakers will be required to fund their own travel and accommodation.</p>
<p>An early-career masterclass on logical epistemology will immediately follow the workshop, from the 30th-31st May, for which a separate call will appear.</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Important Dates:</strong><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for submissions: 8th March, 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Communication of acceptance: 18th March 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for registration: 15th April 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Workshop: 28th-29th May 2019</p>
<p>For any queries, contact Ben Martin (<a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no)">benjamin.martin@uib.no)</a>.</p>
<p>The workshop is organised as part of the European Research Council-funded project The Unknown Science: Understanding the Epistemology of Logic through Practice.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69122[ March 11, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Bergen Early-Career Masterclass on Logical Epistemologyhttps://philevents.org/event/show/69130
<p>BERGEN EARLY-CAREER MASTERCLASS ON LOGICAL EPISTEMOLOGY</p>
<p>University of Bergen, 30th-31st May 2019</p>
<p><strong>Confirmed speakers:</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Roy Sorensen (Washington University, St. Louis): Topic TBA</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ole Hjortland (University of Bergen): Logical Anti-Exceptionalism</p>
<p><strong>Call for participation:</strong></p>
<p>The philosophy department at the University of Bergen is pleased to invite applications for participation in an early-career masterclass on logical epistemology, with tutorials from both Roy Sorensen and Ole Hjortland. Participants will also have the opportunity to present their own work in the philosophy of logic with a 30-minute presentation, and receive feedback from experts in the field.</p>
<p>Applicants should be doctoral candidates, or those within three years of obtaining their PhD. Applications should take the form of an anonymised 1,000-word abstract, plus a separate PDF containing personal details, including paper title, career stage, affiliation and email address, to be sent to <a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no">benjamin.martin@uib.no</a> by the 11th March. All submissions will be blind refereed.</p>
<p>The masterclass has an associated fee of 1,000 NOK (roughly &euro;100), and participants will need to organise their own travel and accommodation. We hope to be able to offer five bursaries worth 5,000 NOK (roughly &euro;500) to talented candidates from under-funded institutions, subject to departmental funding. If you wish to be considered for a bursary, please indicate so and state your reasons for being considered (including funding status) within your email.</p>
<p>The masterclass immediately follows the Bergen Workshop on Logical Disagreements, from the 28th-29th May, for which a separate call has appeared. Participants of the masterclass are welcome to attend the workshop for no fee.</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Important Dates:</strong><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for submissions: 11th March, 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Communication of acceptance: 22nd March 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for registration: 19th April 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Workshop: 30th-31st May 2019</p>
<p>For any queries, contact Ben Martin (<a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no)">benjamin.martin@uib.no)</a>.</p>
<p>The masterclass is organised as part of the European Research Council-funded project The Unknown Science: Understanding the Epistemology of Logic through Practice.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69130[ March 15, 2019] Talk or similar: Tbahttps://philevents.org/event/show/69618
Venue: Arts West<br /><br />Speakers at this event: <br />Greg Restall (University of Melbourne)<br /><br /><p>Greg Restall (Melbourne) will present TBA at 11 in Arts West North Wing 353 on 15 March.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69618[ March 15, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Logic Rulez!? – A Graduate Conference on the Normativity of Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/69350
<p><a name="_GoBack"></a></p>
<p><strong>Keynote Speakers</strong>:</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Corinne Besson (University of Sussex)</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Florian Steinberger (Birkbeck College, University of London)</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Jack Woods (University of Leeds)</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><a name="_GoBack"></a> Are laws of logic normative? Do they, as Frege once claimed, prescribe &ldquo;the way in which one ought to think if one is to think at all&rdquo;? And if so, how and why? Or is this line of thought rather mistaken? Should we deny that logic has any specific normative status? And where would that leave us, if we still want to evaluate reasoning and now ask ourselves what norms are to be applied? Those and related question are the subject of this year's graduate conference of the Vienna Forum for Analytic Philosophy (WFAP), for which we are therefore happy to invite high-quality papers from graduate students on the following or related topics<em>:</em></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Logical laws as (constitutive) norms for thought and reasoning</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Skepticism about the normative status of logic</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Bridge principles</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Normativity in the debate concerning Logical Pluralism</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Non-logical norms for reasoning, including evidential norms, truth norms, probabilistic norms, etc.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>Submission information</strong></p>
<p>Deadline for submission of abstracts: <strong>15</strong><strong>th</strong><strong> of March</strong></p>
<p>Notification of acceptance:<strong> Beginning of April</strong></p>
<p>Abstracts of approximately 500 words should be in English and prepared for blind review. The author&rsquo;s name, affiliation, the title of the submitted paper, and e-mail address must be included in a separate document. Files can be submitted in PDF and should be sent to: <strong>danowskif94@univie.ac.at</strong></p>
<p>All abstracts will be reviewed by members of the Vienna Forum for Analytic Philosophy and faculty members of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Vienna. Accepted papers should be suitable for a 30-min. presentation (approx. 3.000 words). It should be clear from your abstract which authors and debates your paper will address. Contributions relating to the work of the keynote speakers are particularly welcome.</p>
<p>If you have any questions regarding our conference, you can write to <strong>danowskif94@univie.ac.at</strong></p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69350[ March 19, 2019 - March 21, 2019] Conference or similar: Pluralism, Relativism and Skepticism: The First Annual Conference of The Middle East Society for Analytic Philosophyhttps://philevents.org/event/show/64478
Venue: AUC New Cairo Campus Shop, AUC Plaza, Egypt<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/64478[ March 22, 2019] Talk or similar: Tbahttps://philevents.org/event/show/69622
Venue: Arts West<br /><br />Speakers at this event: <br />Brian Weatherson (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)<br /><br /><p>Brian Weatherson (Ann Arbor) will present TBA at 11 in Arts West North Wing 353 on 22 March.&nbsp;</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69622[ April 2, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Applications of Logic in Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics, XXIVhttps://philevents.org/event/show/68218
<p>The 24th Conference 'Applications of Logic in Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics' will be held in Szklarska Poręba from May 13 to May 17, 2019. Traditionally, the organizers of the conference are:</p>
<p><strong>&bull; Department of Logic and Methodology of Sciences, University of Wrocław;<br>&bull; Institute of Mathematics, University of Opole;<br>&bull; Institute of Mathematics, University of Silesia in Katowice.</strong></p>
<p>The meeting takes place in Szklarska Poręba, in the lovely Sudetes Mountains on the Polish-Czech border. Our event is being held under the patronage of the Polish Association for Logic and Philosophy of Science.</p>
<p>Our invited speakers are:</p>
<p><strong>&bull; Andreas Herzig, Universit&eacute; Paul Sabatier, Toulouse;<br>&bull; Emil Jeř&aacute;bek, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague.<br></strong></p>
<p>We encourage everyone who is interested in logic to participate in our event. Contributions related to <strong>logic</strong>,<strong> logical philosophy</strong>,<strong> pragmatics</strong>,<strong> foundations of mathematics</strong>,<strong> foundations of computer science and related areas</strong> are welcome.The abstracts of about 30 minutes talks, not extending one page, should be submitted before April 2, 2019 and the notification of acceptance will be sent until April 12, 2019. The detailed information regarding conference registration, submission of abstracts, and accommodation will be available in the forthcoming announcements and on the conference's website.</p>
<p>See also our history: <a href="http://www.applications-of-logic.uni.wroc.pl/History">http://www.applications-of-logic.uni.wroc.pl/History</a></p>
<p><strong>The Organizing Committee:</strong></p>
<p><strong>&bull; Janusz Czelakowski, University of Opole<br>&bull; Elżbieta Magner, University of Wrocław<br>&bull; Tomasz Połacik, University of Silesia<br>&bull; Marcin Selinger, University of Wrocław</strong><strong></strong></p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68218[ April 5, 2019] Talk or similar: Algorithmic randomness and Bayesian convergence to the truthhttps://philevents.org/event/show/70414
Venue: Arts West<br /><br />Speakers at this event: <br />Francesca Zaffora Blando (Stanford University)<br /><br /><p>Francesca Zaffora Blando (Stanford) will present "Algorithmic randomness and Bayesian convergence to the truth" at 11 on 5 April in Arts West 211 West Wing. The talk will be presented remotely.</p>
<p>Abstract:&nbsp;Almost-everywhere theorems abound in mathematics, especially in fields such as analysis, ergodic theory, probability and measure theory. Much recent work in algorithmic randomness has concerned characterisations of randomness notions in terms of the almost-everywhere behaviour of suitably effectivised functions from analysis or probability.&nbsp;In this talk, I will consider Lévy&rsquo;s Upward Martingale Convergence Theorem from this perspective. The main result I will present is a characterisation of Schnorr randomness in terms of an effectivisation of Lévy&rsquo;s Upward Theorem.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Besides its intrinsic interest, this result has natural applications for formal epistemology and the philosophical interpretation of probability. In particular, the natural Bayesian interpretation of Lévy&rsquo;s Upward Theorem&nbsp;is that belief, in the form of an agent&rsquo;s best estimates of the true value of some integrable random variable, aligns with the truth in the limit almost everywhere. We can think of the random variable as a quantity that the agent is interested in determining: it is fixed once the world is fixed, but it can vary between worlds. We restrict attention to computable random variables because these are the ones whose expectation can be effectively approximated: this constraint thus reflects the restrictions on the agent's epistemic resources. Our characterisation of Schnorr randomness then says that the world is Schnorr random if and only if, for all such computable quantities, the Bayesian agent&rsquo;s estimate of the quantity at the world eventually aligns with its true value. In this sense, the Schnorr random worlds are exactly the ones in which a certain kind of inductive success is attainable.</p>
I will conclude by briefly&nbsp;discussing analogous characterisations of other standard algorithmic randomness notions. These results illustrate how algorithmic randomness may be used to gauge, via computability-theoretic tools, the success set of computable Bayesian agents in terms of the difficulty of the inductive problems they face. This is&nbsp;joint work with Simon Huttegger and Sean Walsh.https://philevents.org/event/show/70414[ May 1, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Studia Logica Conference Trends in Logic19https://philevents.org/event/show/68914
<p>The 19th Trends in Logic international conference will be held in Moscow, Russia from October 2 to October 4, 2019. It is organized by the National Research University Higher School of Economics and the journal Studia Logica</p>
<p>We invite submissions presenting substantial recent advances in formal philosophical logic. The range of topics includes but is not limited to:</p>
<p>- modal logics,</p>
<p>- temporal logics,</p>
<p>- deontic logics,</p>
<p>- logics of agency,</p>
<p>- dynamic logics,</p>
<p>- epistemic and doxastic logics,</p>
<p>- formal epistemology,</p>
<p>- belief revision,</p>
<p>- substructural logics,</p>
<p>- relevance logics,</p>
<p>- paraconsistent logics,</p>
<p>- constructive logics,</p>
<p>- many-valued logics,</p>
<p>- non-monotonic logics,</p>
<p>- the paradoxes,</p>
<p>- theories of truth and falsity,</p>
<p>- natural language semantics,</p>
<p>- vagueness,</p>
<p>- applications of logical methods in philosophy.</p>
<p><strong>Paper submission:</strong></p>
<p>Abstracts of at most two pages length should be submitted electronically as pdf documents using the EasyChair submission page at <strong>https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=trends2019</strong></p>
<p>At least one author of each accepted paper must register for, and attend, the conference to present her or his work.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68914[ May 1, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Anselm of Canterbury: Nature, Order and the Divinehttps://philevents.org/event/show/68978
<p>A conference under the aegis of the <a data-type="external">International Association for Anselm Studies</a> and in partnership with the Durham University <a data-type="external">Centre for Catholic Studies</a>, to be held 9th-11th July 2019 at <a data-type="external">St Chad&rsquo;s College</a>, Durham University and at <a data-type="external">Ushaw College</a>, UK.</p>
<ul>
<li>On the themes of Nature, Order and the Divine in Anselm&rsquo;s writing.</li>
<li>These themes in the writing of Anselm&rsquo;s contemporaries.</li>
<li>These themes in the writing of Anselm&rsquo;s predecessors with obvious connection to their later usage in Anselmian contexts.</li>
<li>Wider application of these themes in architecture, art-history and archaeological contexts.</li>
<li>We are also keen, alongside the main theme for the conference, to encourage proposals for papers relating to vibrant and engaging research on all aspects of the life, thought, and legacy of Anselm.</li>
</ul>
<p>Registration: https://www.dur.ac.uk/conference.booking/details/?id=1050</p>
<p>Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be sent to Professor Giles Gasper at <u><a target="_self" data-type="mail">g.e.m.gasper@durham.ac.uk</a></u>. Decisions on paper acceptance will be made by a committee from the IAAS and on a rolling basis. The final deadline for paper submission will be 1st May 2019. All inquiries should be directed in the first instance to Professor Gasper.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68978[ May 1, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: The 5th IIFs Graduate Conferencehttps://philevents.org/event/show/70410
<p>The 5th IIFs Graduate Conference<br><br>To be held on October 30-31st, 2019 at Mexico City<br><br>Keynote speaker:<br>Sherri Irvin, University of Oklahoma<br><br>We invite the submission of papers from graduate students on the following areas of analytic philosophy:<br><br>Metaphysics, Epistemology, Logic and its philosophy, Philosophy of language, Philosophy of science, Philosophy of mind and cognitive science, Ethics and metaethics, Political philosophy, Philosophy of law, Philosophy of art, History of philosophy<br><br><br>Submission information<br><br><br>-Deadline for submission: May 1st, 2019.<br><br>-Accepted papers will be announced no more than seven weeks after the deadline.<br><br>-Papers must be in English and not exceed 5000 words (excluding abstract and references).<br><br>-Authors must send two files: (i) the paper (including title, an abstract of no more than 250 words and keywords) prepared for blind review, and (ii) a file with the following information: author&rsquo;s name, affiliation, title of the paper and email. Files must be submitted in pdf format to .<br><br>-All papers will be double-blind peer reviewed. Accepted papers should be suitable for a thirty-minute presentation, which a graduate student from unam will reply.<br><br>-IFFs-UNAM offers to cover some of the accommodation expenses for accepted speakers.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/70410[ May 4, 2019 - May 5, 2019] Conference or similar: BU Metaphysics & Epistemology of Logic Workshophttps://philevents.org/event/show/69974
Venue: TBD<br /><br /><p>This workshop is open to all philosophy faculty and students, but please email me to let me know you are coming for refreshment ordering purposes.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69974[ May 13, 2019 - May 17, 2019] Conference or similar: Applications of Logic in Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics, XXIVhttps://philevents.org/event/show/68214
Venue: Venue: Hotel OLIMP, ul.1 Maja 62<br /><br /><p>The 24th Conference 'Applications of Logic in Philosophy and the Foundations of Mathematics' will be held in Szklarska Poręba from May 13 to May 17, 2019. Traditionally, the organizers of the conference are:</p>
<p><strong>&bull; Department of Logic and Methodology of Sciences, University of Wrocław;<br>&bull; Institute of Mathematics, University of Opole;<br>&bull; Institute of Mathematics, University of Silesia in Katowice.</strong></p>
<p>The meeting takes place in Szklarska Poręba, in the lovely Sudetes Mountains on the Polish-Czech border. Our event is being held under the patronage of the Polish Association for Logic and Philosophy of Science.</p>
<p>Our invited speakers are:</p>
<p><strong>&bull; Andreas Herzig, Universit&eacute; Paul Sabatier, Toulouse;<br>&bull; Emil Jeř&aacute;bek, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague.<br></strong></p>
<p>We encourage everyone who is interested in logic to participate in our event. Contributions related to <strong>logic</strong>,<strong> logical philosophy</strong>,<strong> pragmatics</strong>,<strong> foundations of mathematics</strong>,<strong> foundations of computer science and related areas</strong> are welcome.The abstracts of about 30 minutes talks, not extending one page, should be submitted before April 2, 2019 and the notification of acceptance will be sent until April 12, 2019. The detailed information regarding conference registration, submission of abstracts, and accommodation will be available in the forthcoming announcements and on the conference's website.</p>
<p>See also our history: <a href="http://www.applications-of-logic.uni.wroc.pl/History">http://www.applications-of-logic.uni.wroc.pl/History</a></p>
<p><strong>The Organizing Committee:</strong></p>
<p><strong>&bull; Janusz Czelakowski, University of Opole<br>&bull; Elżbieta Magner, University of Wrocław<br>&bull; Tomasz Połacik, University of Silesia<br>&bull; Marcin Selinger, University of Wrocław</strong><strong></strong></p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68214[ May 17, 2019 - May 18, 2019] Conference or similar: Annual International Conference "uAnalytiCon-2019: Identity, Individual Concepts, and Semantic Uniformity"https://philevents.org/event/show/64650
Venue: 51 Lenin St<br /><br /><p>The conference aims to examine the philosophical difficulties in modal logic and the application of modal logic to the wide range of philosophical problems. We will focus on the higher-order modal logics, the difficulties appearing while quantifying into modal contexts, and the problem of identity across possible worlds. The other themes include developing semantics with modal operators, vagueness operator, and supervaluationism, the role of modal assumptions in science as well as intensional paradoxes.</p>
<p>Keynote speaker: Timothy Williamson (University of Oxford).</p>
<p>Official conference languages: Russian, English.</p>
<p>The participation is free of charge. Unfortunately, the Organizing Committee has no available funds for covering transport and accommodation. Participants are responsible for covering travel expenses. Please, contact the Organizing Committee with any questions at&nbsp;conf@uanalyticon.ru.</p>
<p>Organizing Committee:</p>
<ul>
<li>Ilya Guschin (PhD student, UrFU)</li>
<li>Alexey Kislov (PhD, UrFU)</li>
<li>Lev Lamberov (PhD, UrFU)</li>
<li>Olga Kozyreva (PhD student, UrFU)</li>
</ul>
<p>Head of the Organizing Committee:</p>
<p>Dmitry Ankin (PhD, UrFU)</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/64650[ May 17, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Truthmaker Semanticshttps://philevents.org/event/show/70050
<p><strong>Call for Extended Abstracts.&nbsp;</strong>Eight one-hour slots (up to 40 minutes for the talk, followed by 20&nbsp;minutes for discussion) are available for contributed papers on the topic of the conference. If you&nbsp;would like to present a paper, please submit a CV and an extended abstract of up to 2,000 words,&nbsp;suitable for anonymous review, to hamburgrelevance (at) gmail (dot) com by the deadline of 17 May.&nbsp;Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by the end of May. We will cover the full accommodation&nbsp;costs of successful applicants (four nights in a nearby hotel) as well as travel costs of up to 300&nbsp;EUR per person.<br><br><strong>Student Bursaries.</strong>&nbsp;Up to eight stipends, each in the amount of 500 EUR, will be available for&nbsp;graduate students to help finance their visit to the workshop. To apply please send to&nbsp;hamburgrelevance (at) gmail (dot) com by the deadline of 17 May a CV together with a cover page&nbsp;including your name, affiliation, contact information, and a brief statement of no more than 250&nbsp;words explaining how your research would benefit from the workshop. Notifications of acceptance&nbsp;will be sent out by the end of May.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/70050[ May 22, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Engaging Economies of Changehttps://philevents.org/event/show/67106
<p>The need for change in a world of environmental decline, economic instability and social conflict is well recognized. Despite perceived tradeoffs between economic prosperity and environmental protection, the interdependencies and intersections are well-established: our economy is embedded and completely dependent on the health of the environment. Strong interdisciplinary research and practice that informs and is informed by present-day realities is crucial.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;The 12th biennial CANSEE conference theme, Engaging Economies of Change, recognizes that many solutions to these challenges already exist and must therefore be understood and replicated. This conference aims to facilitate and enhance the exchange of knowledge on the economy- environment nexus by strengthening the agency of all relevant stakeholders to explore alternative modes of &lsquo;economy&rsquo;. To accomplish this, partnerships between academics and front-line practitioners will be emphasized, catalyzing a public conversation that links deep theoretical approaches with active community practice. We warmly welcome participation from activist groups, non-profit organizations, industry representatives and government agencies to enhance the conference content with real-world challenges and applications. We care about representing diverse voices, and encourage submissions from minorities and marginalized groups. Academics are expected to contribute original research that augments the core of the debate.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67106[ May 22, 2019 - May 25, 2019] Conference or similar: Engaging Economies of Changehttps://philevents.org/event/show/67102
Venue: 67 Erb Street West<br /><br /><p>The need for change in a world of environmental decline, economic instability and social conflict is well recognized. Despite perceived tradeoffs between economic prosperity and environmental protection, the interdependencies and intersections are well-established: our economy is embedded and completely dependent on the health of the environment. Strong interdisciplinary research and practice that informs and is informed by present-day realities is crucial.<br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;The 12th biennial CANSEE conference theme, Engaging Economies of Change, recognizes that many solutions to these challenges already exist and must therefore be understood and replicated. This conference aims to facilitate and enhance the exchange of knowledge on the economy- environment nexus by strengthening the agency of all relevant stakeholders to explore alternative modes of &lsquo;economy&rsquo;. To accomplish this, partnerships between academics and front-line practitioners will be emphasized, catalyzing a public conversation that links deep theoretical approaches with active community practice. We warmly welcome participation from activist groups, non-profit organizations, industry representatives and government agencies to enhance the conference content with real-world challenges and applications. We care about representing diverse voices, and encourage submissions from minorities and marginalized groups. Academics are expected to contribute original research that augments the core of the debate.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67102[ May 23, 2019 - May 24, 2019] Conference or similar: The Philosophy of Notation: Operational Iconicity and Observational Advantages in Diagramshttps://philevents.org/event/show/68026
Venue: Via Azzo Gardino 23<br /><br /><p>The Philosophy of Notation: Operational Iconicity and Observational Advantages in Diagrams&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>
<p>Location: Department of Philosophy and Communication, University of Bologna, Italy.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>Dates: 23-24 May 2019.&nbsp; &nbsp;</p>
<p>https://sites.google.com/view/philosophy-of-notation2019</p>
<p>What can we say is truly distinctive of diagrammatic notations for logical reasoning, relative to equivalently expressive non-diagrammatic forms? Several responses have been given in the literature &ndash; logical diagrams are visual (Shin 2002), they have multiple, equivalent &ldquo;readings&rdquo; (Shin 2002, Macbeth 2005, Schlimm 2018), they are directly interpreted (Lemon 1996, Stenning 2000) &ndash; that have attempted to overcome the old difficulty of defining a logical diagram&nbsp; in terms of isomorphism; but none seems to have gained universal acceptance.</p>
<p>An idea has emerged in recent years that merits a deeper analysis. The idea is that diagrams in general and mathematical and logical diagrams in particular are languages whose formulas are capable of expressing <em>more information</em> (of whatever kind) than was necessary to construct the formula.This feature was called &ldquo;autarchy&rdquo; by Leibniz (he was thinking of the binary notation for arithmetic), and variants of it have been called &ldquo;iconicity&rdquo; (Peirce), &ldquo;operational iconicity&rdquo; (Stjernfelt), &ldquo;free ride&rdquo; (Shimojima) and &ldquo;observational advantage&rdquo; (Stapleton, Jamnik &amp; Shimojima). The idea is simple and intuitive, but adequate analysis of it has not yet been made.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The aim of this workshop is to subject this idea to analysis by seeking contributions that explore the notions of operational iconicity and observational advantages from different perspectives: the formal semantics of diagrammatic languages, the philosophy of language and logic, studies on mathematical and logical cognition, the philosophy of mathematical practice, and the psychology of reasoning. <a name="_GoBack111111111111111111111111111111111"></a>We envision a multidisciplinary collaborative workshop that will enable us to identify common questions and goals, and to share findings across these areas of research.&nbsp; The workshop will follow on from the success of the first &ldquo;Philosophy of Notation&rdquo; international conference in Tallinn, 2015.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Invited Speakers</p>
<p>Amirouche Moktefi</p>
<p>Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen</p>
<p>Atsushi Shimojima</p>
<p>Gem Stapleton</p>
<p>Frederik Stjernfelt.&nbsp;</p>
<p>We invite authors to submit a 500 word abstract to <a href="mailto:j.burton@brighton.ac.uk">j.burton@brighton.ac.uk</a> and <u>francesco.bellucci4@unibo.it </u>by the closing date of 15th February 2019. Abstracts will be reviewed by the Program Committee and feedback provided. Notification of acceptance will be given by the beginning of March 2019. (see the <u>Call for Papers</u>)</p>
<p>Registration is free -- email the organisers to let us know you are coming.</p>
<p>Co-chairs:&nbsp;</p>
<p>Jim Burton, University of Brighton</p>
<p>Francesco Bellucci, University of Bologna</p>
<p>Program Committee:</p>
<p>Daniele Chiffi, Polytechnic University of Milan, Italy</p>
<p>Amirouche Moktefi, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia</p>
<p>Claudio Paolucci, University of Bologna, Italy</p>
<p>Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia</p>
<p>Atsushi Shimojima, Doshisha University, Japan</p>
<p>Gem Stapleton, University of Brighton, UK</p>
<p>Frederik Stjernfelt, Aalborg University, Denmark</p>
<p>This event is supported by UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council under the project <em>The Applied Semiotics of Visual Modelling</em> (EP/R043949/1).</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68026[ May 24, 2019 - May 27, 2019] Conference or similar: American Symposium on the History of Logic: Validity throughout Historyhttps://philevents.org/event/show/62942
Venue: 340 Royce Drive<br /><br /><p>We are pleased to announce the first meeting of the <em>American Symposium on the History of Logic</em>, to be held at the University of California, Los Angeles, from May 24th to 27th 2019.</p>
<p>This Symposium is conceived as a meeting of specialists on different traditions in the History of Logic.</p>
<p>Each meeting will focus on a specific issue central to logic, with the aim of offering a comparative picture of its treatment throughout history. The intent is to bring together contributions particularly on:</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sanskrit and Eastern logic (Ancient, Medieval, Early Modern);</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ancient, Late Ancient and Byzantine Greek logic;</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Syriac and Arabic logic;</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Medieval Latin logic;</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Renaissance, Early Modern and Modern Western logic.</p>
<p>For the upcoming meeting, we invite contributions focusing on accounts of <em>Validity throughout History</em>, with particular regard to the aforementioned traditions.</p>
<p>Presentations should be 40 min long (plus 20 min discussion).</p>
<p>Proposals should be submitted to <strong>ashistoryoflogic@gmail.com</strong> as anonymous abstracts (max 500 words) and a separate document containing the author's information, by September 15, 2018.</p>
<p>Decisions will be communicated by November 1.</p>
<p>We particularly encourage submissions by scholars from underrepresented groups in academic philosophy.</p>
<p>Selected papers will be considered for publication in the conference proceedings.</p>
<p>For further information, contact:</p>
<p>Graziana Ciola (grazianaciola@g.ucla.edu)</p>
<p>Milo Crimi (mcrimi@humnet.ucla.edu)</p>
<p>Calvin Normore (normore@humnet.ucla.edu)</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/62942[ May 28, 2019 - May 29, 2019] Conference or similar: Bergen Workshop on Logical Disagreementshttps://philevents.org/event/show/69118
Venue: Sydnesplass 12-13<br /><br /><p>BERGEN WORKSHOP ON LOGICAL DISAGREEMENTS</p>
<p>University of Bergen, 28th-29th May 2019</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Confirmed speakers:</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Roy Sorensen (Washington University, St. Louis)</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Catarina Dutilh Novaes (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Catrin Campbell-Moore (Bristol University)</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Call for papers:</strong></p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;</strong>We invite submissions for 45-minute presentations, with additional time for discussion, on the broad topic of logical disagreements, addressing questions including, but not limited to:</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Are logical disagreements possible?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Are there distinct types of logical disagreements?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Can logical disagreements ever be resolved?</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How have historical logical disagreements been resolved?</p>
<p>Submissions should take the form of anonymised 1,000-1,500 word abstracts, and be sent to <a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no">benjamin.martin@uib.no</a> by the 8th March. Contact details, including paper title, affiliation and email address, should be submitted as a separate PDF. All submissions will be blind refereed.</p>
<p>The workshop has no associated registration fee, but speakers will be required to fund their own travel and accommodation.</p>
<p>An early-career masterclass on logical epistemology will immediately follow the workshop, from the 30th-31st May, for which a separate call will appear.</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Important Dates:</strong><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for submissions: 8th March, 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Communication of acceptance: 18th March 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for registration: 15th April 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Workshop: 28th-29th May 2019</p>
<p>For any queries, contact Ben Martin (<a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no)">benjamin.martin@uib.no)</a>.</p>
<p>The workshop is organised as part of the European Research Council-funded project The Unknown Science: Understanding the Epistemology of Logic through Practice.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69118[ May 29, 2019 - May 31, 2019] Conference or similar: Perspectives on content (ICSO V)https://philevents.org/event/show/68958
Venue: Bulnes 642<br /><br /><p>The notion of content is central to philosophy of language, formal semantics, linguistics, philosophy of mind, and logic, and thus provides for an interesting interface between these disciplines. In recent years, these fields have witnessed an increased interest in several debates concerning the notion of content, including, but not limited to:</p>
<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Truth-conditional (at issue) and non-truth-conditional (non-at issue) content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Factual, evaluative, normative and expressive content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Structured and unstructured propositions<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Intensional and hyperintensional notions of content<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &bull; Aboutness and subject matter</p>
<p>We welcome contributions on these, and other, topics regarding this central notion.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68958[ May 30, 2019 - May 31, 2019] Conference or similar: Bergen Early-Career Masterclass on Logical Epistemologyhttps://philevents.org/event/show/69126
Venue: Sydnesplass 12-13<br /><br /><p>BERGEN EARLY-CAREER MASTERCLASS ON LOGICAL EPISTEMOLOGY</p>
<p>University of Bergen, 30th-31st May 2019</p>
<p><strong>Confirmed speakers:</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Roy Sorensen (Washington University, St. Louis): Topic TBA</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Ole Hjortland (University of Bergen): Logical Anti-Exceptionalism</p>
<p><strong>Call for participation:</strong></p>
<p>The philosophy department at the University of Bergen is pleased to invite applications for participation in an early-career masterclass on logical epistemology, with tutorials from both Roy Sorensen and Ole Hjortland. Participants will also have the opportunity to present their own work in the philosophy of logic with a 30-minute presentation, and receive feedback from experts in the field.</p>
<p>Applicants should be doctoral candidates, or those within three years of obtaining their PhD. Applications should take the form of an anonymised 1,000-word abstract, plus a separate PDF containing personal details, including paper title, career stage, affiliation and email address, to be sent to <a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no">benjamin.martin@uib.no</a> by the 11th March. All submissions will be blind refereed.</p>
<p>The masterclass has an associated fee of 1,000 NOK (roughly &euro;100), and participants will need to organise their own travel and accommodation. We hope to be able to offer five bursaries worth 5,000 NOK (roughly &euro;500) to talented candidates from under-funded institutions, subject to departmental funding. If you wish to be considered for a bursary, please indicate so and state your reasons for being considered (including funding status) within your email.</p>
<p>The masterclass immediately follows the Bergen Workshop on Logical Disagreements, from the 28th-29th May, for which a separate call has appeared. Participants of the masterclass are welcome to attend the workshop for no fee.</p>
<p><strong><br></strong></p>
<p><strong>Important Dates:</strong><strong>&nbsp;</strong></p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for submissions: 11th March, 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Communication of acceptance: 22nd March 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Deadline for registration: 19th April 2019</p>
<p>&middot;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Workshop: 30th-31st May 2019</p>
<p>For any queries, contact Ben Martin (<a href="mailto:benjamin.martin@uib.no)">benjamin.martin@uib.no)</a>.</p>
<p>The masterclass is organised as part of the European Research Council-funded project The Unknown Science: Understanding the Epistemology of Logic through Practice.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69126[ May 31, 2019 - June 2, 2019] Conference or similar: MCMP-Western Ontario Workshop on Computation in Scientific Theory and Practicehttps://philevents.org/event/show/69654
Venue: Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1<br /><br /><p>The goal of this interdisciplinary meeting is to explore philosophical and historical issues that arise at the intersection of theoretical computer science, mathematics, and natural science, including issues that arise in the practice of those disciplines. We welcome submissions on topics including, but not limited to, the following: the history of computer science; the foundations of computation and mathematical cognition; computational and informational perspectives on scientific decision making, scientific methodology, and the characterisation of scientific theories; physical notions of computation and the 'Physical Church-Turing Thesis'.</p>
<p>CALL FOR ABSTRACTS</p>
<p>Prospective authors are invited to submit an extended abstract of between 600-1000 words, along with a short abstract of no more than 150 words, via the&nbsp;conference's EasyChair site. Submissions must be prepared for blind review by removing any identifying author information, and submitted in Portable Document Format (PDF).</p>
<p>We especially encourage submissions from early career researchers and researchers from underrepresented groups, although submissions from researchers in all stages of their career and from all groups are welcome.</p>
<p>IMPORTANT DATES</p>
<ul>
<li>Submissions deadline: 17 March 2019</li>
<li>Notification of acceptance: Beginning of April 2019.</li>
<li>Conference dates: May 31 - June 2, 2019.</li>
</ul>https://philevents.org/event/show/69654[ June 10, 2019 - June 12, 2019] Conference or similar: 10th Workshop in Decisions, Games & Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/68174
Venue: Unknown<br /><br /><p>Caltech will host the 10th Decisions, Games &amp; Logic (DGL) workshop in June 2019. The topic for this iteration will be ethical dimensions of AI and Machine Learning as well as public policy applications of data science. The topic is to be broadly construed. We are happy to see models of/formal approaches to issues of fairness and discrimination, normative projects on the nature of fairness and discrimination in automated decision-making, and technical projects on constructing fair ML or statistical modeling/analysis of related public policy problems.</p>
<p>Keynote Speakers:<br><br>David Danks (Carnegie Mellon University, Philosophy &amp; Psychology)<br><br>Sharad Goel (Stanford University, Management Science &amp; Engineering)<br><br>Deborah Hellman (University of Virginia, School of Law)<br><br>Aaron Roth (University of Pennsylvania, Computer Science)<br><br>Ilya Shpitser (Johns Hopkins University, Computer Science &amp; Biostatistics)</p>
<p>The deadline for submissions is February 15, 2019. Submit by e-mail to caltech.dgl2019@gmail.com. Please remove identifying information from your submission and include corresponding author&rsquo;s contact information in the body of the e-mail. For questions, write to the above e-mail address. The workshop schedule will be available at borisbabic.com/DGL.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68174[ June 19, 2019 - June 21, 2019] Conference or similar: Formal Epistemology Workshop 2019https://philevents.org/event/show/67742
Venue: Unknown<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/67742[ June 20, 2019 - June 22, 2019] Conference or similar: Bilateral Approaches to Meaninghttps://philevents.org/event/show/68158
Venue: Unknown<br /><br /><p>Traditional semantics gives the meaning of expressions in terms of conditions on one kind of primitive (e.g. truth, assertion, belief).&nbsp;<em>Bilateral&nbsp;</em>approaches hold that the meaning of expressions is characterized in terms of conditions on two, usually opposite primitives (e.g. truth and falsity, assertion and rejection, belief and disbelief). Recent years have witnessed the independent development of a variety of bilateral approaches to analyze phenomena such as negation, epistemic modality and counterfactuals, from both a proof-theoretic and a model-theoretic perspective. The workshop will bring together researchers &nbsp;from either perspective in order to provide a venue for the systematic exploration of commonalities, differences and potential interactions between such approaches.</p>
<ul>
<li>Are there natural points of contact between the various bilateral approaches?</li>
<li>Can a unified bilateral approach be developed?</li>
<li>What advantages, if any, does it have over the standard unilateral approach?</li>
<li>What is the remit of bilateral semantics in formal semantics and/or philosophy of language?</li>
<li>What is the linguistic, cognitive, or metaphysical status of meanings given in terms of bilateral semantics?</li>
<li>Are there further areas of application for bilateral approaches?</li>
<li>Should the bilateral approach be further expanded into a multilateral approach?</li>
</ul>https://philevents.org/event/show/68158[ June 23, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Beyond Secular Faith. The Whole in the Fragment: Sacramental versus Contractual Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/67770
<p>7th Annual Summer School and International Conference</p>
<p><em>Beyond Secular Faith</em></p>
<p><strong><em>The Whole in the Fragment: Sacramental versus Contractual Logic.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em></em></strong>June 23-30, 2019</p>
<p>"God is Love." This wager concerning the nature of God - theological in the deepest sense - is generated, not from an idea, but from the experience of the encounter with Jesus Christ, the primordial "sacrament" of the Father.&nbsp; It entails not only a judgment concerning the nature of God himself but a judgment concerning the nature and meaning of reality and of our embodiment. This Love, of which reality is a sign as Jesus is the sign of the Father, is rightly qualified as semper maior, a fact always greater than our ideas and predeterminations. As such, the sign of love always breaks open our contractual logic. This year's summer school will be an attempt think within the horizon of this semper maior, to pose the question of the human as bound up with the Love that is God himself and the world which is the concrete sign of that Love.</p>
<p>For six years our summer school has facilitated a rich and friendly theological, philosophical and cultural dialogue in freedom, in the unique setting of Granada, a breathtakingly beautiful city that lies at the historic crossroads of modernity and the Christian tradition.</p>
<p>APPLICATION/ABSTRACT-SUBMISSION</p>
<p>Both the Summer School and the Academic Conference are open to professors, academic researchers, and graduate students.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Participants can choose to participate in either the summer school or the conference, or both.</p>
<p>Summer School: June 23-28</p>
<p>Academic Conference: June 28-30</p>
<p>To apply for the Summer School and/or submit a paper for presentation at the Academic Conference, please send the following items to secretaria@institutoifes.es :</p>
<p>A short CV;</p>
<p>Letter of Interest;</p>
<p>If interested in presenting a paper, a paper abstract (400 words) on the conference theme.</p>
<p>ORGANIZATION AND FEES&nbsp;</p>
<p>A key feature of the IFES Summer School is the out-of-class learning which will be an integral part of each module. All International Summer students and professors will stay in a 4 star hotel with swimming pool, near the heart of the city.</p>
<p>The programme fee includes all tuition costs, your own private room with bathroom, a comprehensive orientation and social activities.</p>
<p>BLOCK 1 (23-28 June) - Summer School - Room &amp; Board: 550&euro;/person*</p>
<p>BLOCK 2 (27-30 June) - Conference - Room &amp; Board: 390&euro;/person*</p>
<p>BLOCK 1 &amp; 2 (23-30 June) -&nbsp; Summer School &amp; Conference - Room &amp; Board: 695&euro;/person*</p>
<p>BLOCK 3 (23-30 June) -&nbsp; Summer School &amp; Conference - Without Room &amp; Board: 100&euro;/person</p>
<p>For additional conference details to be announced, please visit: http://www.institutoifes.es/index.php/en/</p>
<p>Or e-mail: secretaria@institutoifes.es</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67770[ June 23, 2019 - June 30, 2019] Conference or similar: Beyond Secular Faith. The Whole in the Fragment: Sacramental versus Contractual Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/67766
Venue: Unknown<br /><br /><p>7th Annual Summer School and International Conference</p>
<p><em>Beyond Secular Faith</em></p>
<p><strong><em>The Whole in the Fragment: Sacramental versus Contractual Logic.</em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em></em></strong>June 23-30, 2019</p>
<p>"God is Love." This wager concerning the nature of God - theological in the deepest sense - is generated, not from an idea, but from the experience of the encounter with Jesus Christ, the primordial "sacrament" of the Father.&nbsp; It entails not only a judgment concerning the nature of God himself but a judgment concerning the nature and meaning of reality and of our embodiment. This Love, of which reality is a sign as Jesus is the sign of the Father, is rightly qualified as semper maior, a fact always greater than our ideas and predeterminations. As such, the sign of love always breaks open our contractual logic. This year's summer school will be an attempt think within the horizon of this semper maior, to pose the question of the human as bound up with the Love that is God himself and the world which is the concrete sign of that Love.</p>
<p>For six years our summer school has facilitated a rich and friendly theological, philosophical and cultural dialogue in freedom, in the unique setting of Granada, a breathtakingly beautiful city that lies at the historic crossroads of modernity and the Christian tradition.</p>
<p>APPLICATION/ABSTRACT-SUBMISSION</p>
<p>Both the Summer School and the Academic Conference are open to professors, academic researchers, and graduate students.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Participants can choose to participate in either the summer school or the conference, or both.</p>
<p>Summer School: June 23-28</p>
<p>Academic Conference: June 28-30</p>
<p>To apply for the Summer School and/or submit a paper for presentation at the Academic Conference, please send the following items to secretaria@institutoifes.es :</p>
<p>A short CV;</p>
<p>Letter of Interest;</p>
<p>If interested in presenting a paper, a paper abstract (400 words) on the conference theme.</p>
<p>ORGANIZATION AND FEES&nbsp;</p>
<p>A key feature of the IFES Summer School is the out-of-class learning which will be an integral part of each module. All International Summer students and professors will stay in a 4 star hotel with swimming pool, near the heart of the city.</p>
<p>The programme fee includes all tuition costs, your own private room with bathroom, a comprehensive orientation and social activities.</p>
<p>BLOCK 1 (23-28 June) - Summer School - Room &amp; Board: 550&euro;/person</p>
<p>BLOCK 2 (27-30 June) - Conference - Room &amp; Board: 390&euro;/person</p>
<p>BLOCK 1 &amp; 2 (23-30 June) -&nbsp; Summer School &amp; Conference - Room &amp; Board: 695&euro;/person</p>
<p>BLOCK 3 (23-30 June) -&nbsp; Summer School &amp; Conference - Without Room &amp; Board: 100&euro;/person</p>
<p>For additional conference details to be announced, please visit: http://www.institutoifes.es/index.php/en/</p>
<p>Or e-mail: secretaria@institutoifes.es</p>
<p>*Course credit at an American degree granting university is available for interested students.&nbsp; Please e-mail: secretaria@institutoifes.es</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/67766[ June 24, 2019 - June 26, 2019] Conference or similar: Logic Rulez!? – A Graduate Conference on the Normativity of Logichttps://philevents.org/event/show/69346
Venue: Universitätsring 1<br /><br /><p><a name="_GoBack"></a> Are laws of logic normative? Do they, as Frege once claimed, prescribe &ldquo;the way in which one ought to think if one is to think at all&rdquo;? And if so, how and why? Or is this line of thought rather mistaken? Should we deny that logic has any specific normative status? And where would that leave us, if we still want to evaluate reasoning and now ask ourselves what norms are to be applied? Those and related question are the subject of this year's graduate conference of the Vienna Forum for Analytic Philosophy (WFAP), for which we are therefore happy to invite high-quality papers from graduate students on the following or related topics<em>:</em></p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Logical laws as (constitutive) norms for thought and reasoning</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Skepticism about the normative status of logic</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Bridge principles</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Normativity in the debate concerning Logical Pluralism</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Non-logical norms for reasoning, including evidential norms, truth norms, probabilistic norms, etc.</p>
</li>
</ul>https://philevents.org/event/show/69346[ July 8, 2019] CFP for conference or similar: Probability & Logic Workshop (PROGIC 2019)https://philevents.org/event/show/69366
<p>The<strong>&nbsp;Ninth Workshop on Combining Probability and Logic&nbsp;</strong>(<strong>PROGIC 2019</strong>) continues the&nbsp;progic workshop series. The focus of this iteration of PROGIC is decision making, with an emphasis on advances in&nbsp;descriptive, normative, and prescriptive models of decision making.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<ul>
<li>Submission deadline:&nbsp;<strong>March 20, 2019</strong></li>
<li>Notification of acceptance:&nbsp;<strong>April 10, 2019</strong></li>
<li>Conference:&nbsp;<strong>July 8-10, 2019</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><strong>See:&nbsp;</strong><strong>https://easychair.org/cfp/progic2019</strong></p>https://philevents.org/event/show/69366[ July 8, 2019 - July 10, 2019] Conference or similar: Probability & Logic Workshop (PROGIC 2019)https://philevents.org/event/show/69362
Venue: Adickesallee 32-34<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/69362[ July 9, 2019 - July 11, 2019] Conference or similar: Anselm of Canterbury: Nature, Order and the Divinehttps://philevents.org/event/show/68974
Venue: Unknown<br /><br /><p>A conference under the aegis of the <a target="_blank" data-type="external">International Association for Anselm Studies</a> and in partnership with the Durham University <a target="_blank" data-type="external">Centre for Catholic Studies</a>, to be held 9th-11th July 2019 at <a target="_blank" data-type="external">St Chad&rsquo;s College</a>, Durham University and at <a target="_blank" data-type="external">Ushaw College</a>, UK.</p>
<ul>
<li>On the themes of Nature, Order and the Divine in Anselm&rsquo;s writing.</li>
<li>These themes in the writing of Anselm&rsquo;s contemporaries.</li>
<li>These themes in the writing of Anselm&rsquo;s predecessors with obvious connection to their later usage in Anselmian contexts.</li>
<li>Wider application of these themes in architecture, art-history and archaeological contexts.</li>
</ul>
<p>Registratiion: https://www.dur.ac.uk/conference.booking/details/?id=1050</p>
<p>For further information, please contact Professor Giles E. M. Gasper, <a href="mailto:g.e.m.gasper@durham.ac.uk">g.e.m.gasper@durham.ac.uk</a></p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68974[ July 18, 2019 - July 19, 2019] Conference or similar: Epistemic Conflictshttps://philevents.org/event/show/69246
Venue: Universitätsstraße 37<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/69246[ July 29, 2019 - July 31, 2019] Conference or similar: Truthmaker Semanticshttps://philevents.org/event/show/70046
Venue: Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1 <br /><br /><p><em><strong>Truthmaker Semantics: Applications in Philosophy and Linguistics</strong><br>Conference Announcement and Call for Extended Abstracts</em><br><br>Kit Fine and the Emmy Noether Project&nbsp;Relevance&nbsp;are delighted to announce a conference on&nbsp;truthmaker semantics and its applications in philosophy and linguistics, to take place July 29-31,&nbsp;2019 at the University of Hamburg. The conference is generously funded by Prof Fine&rsquo;s Anneliese&nbsp;Maier Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation as well as by the DFG through Stephan&nbsp;Kraemer's Emmy Noether grant (KR 4516/2-1).<br><br><strong>Topic.</strong>&nbsp;Truthmaker semantics deviates from the familiar framework of possible world semantics in&nbsp;two fundamental and related ways. First, the notion of a possible world is replaced by a more&nbsp;general notion of a state that applies to any fragment of a world. Second, a sentence is taken to be&nbsp;made true by a state only if every part of the state is involved in rendering the sentence true. A&nbsp;significant advantage of truthmaker semantics over the possible worlds approach is that it connects&nbsp;sentences with the worldly items that are directly&nbsp;relevant&nbsp;to their truth, thereby allowing important&nbsp;and intuitive hyperintensional distinctions to be drawn in a natural and formally elegant way. While&nbsp;the framework was originally developed as a semantics for relevant entailment by van Fraassen in&nbsp;the 1960s, recent developments have demonstrated its wide applicability in logic (e.g.&nbsp;&nbsp;deontic&nbsp;logic), metaphysics (e.g. ground), the philosophy of language and linguistics (e.g. subject matter,&nbsp;presupposition, counterfactuals), the philosophy of science (e.g. confirmation), and epistemology&nbsp;(e.g. belief revision).<br><br></p>
The conference will bring together leading experts on truthmaker semantics and junior researchers.&nbsp;The confirmed keynote speakers are<br><br>-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Kit Fine (NYU)<br>-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mark Jago (Nottingham)<br>-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Friederike Moltmann (CNRS Paris, NYU)<br>-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Daniel Rothschild (UCL)<br>-&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Steve Yablo (MIT)<br><br>More information is available at&nbsp;<a href="https://relevanceproject.wordpress.com/events/tmsconference/">https://relevanceproject.wordpress.com/events/tmsconference/</a>.<br><br><strong>Call for Extended Abstracts.&nbsp;</strong>Eight one-hour slots (up to 40 minutes for the talk, followed by 20&nbsp;minutes for discussion) are available for contributed papers on the topic of the conference. If you&nbsp;would like to present a paper, please submit a CV and an extended abstract of up to 2,000 words,&nbsp;suitable for anonymous review, to hamburgrelevance (at) gmail (dot) com by the deadline of 17 May.&nbsp;Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by the end of May. We will cover the full accommodation&nbsp;costs of successful applicants (four nights in a nearby hotel) as well as travel costs of up to 300&nbsp;EUR per person.<br><br><strong>Student Bursaries.</strong>&nbsp;Up to eight stipends, each in the amount of 500 EUR, will be available for&nbsp;graduate students to help finance their visit to the workshop. To apply please send to&nbsp;hamburgrelevance (at) gmail (dot) com by the deadline of 17 May a CV together with a cover page&nbsp;including your name, affiliation, contact information, and a brief statement of no more than 250&nbsp;words explaining how your research would benefit from the workshop. Notifications of acceptance&nbsp;will be sent out by the end of May.<br><br><strong>Hamburg Summer School on Truthmaker Semantics.&nbsp;</strong>In the week before the conference, from&nbsp;22-26 July, there will be a Summer School on the topic of Truthmaker Semantics taught by Kit Fine,&nbsp;Mark Jago, Friederike Moltmann, Johannes Korbmacher, and Stephan Kr&auml;mer. More information is&nbsp;available at&nbsp;<a href="https://hamburgersommerkurs.wordpress.com/">https://hamburgersommerkurs.wordpress.com</a>&nbsp;
<br><strong>Contact.</strong>&nbsp;For any questions concerning the conference, please write us at hamburgrelevance (at)&nbsp;gmail (dot) com.https://philevents.org/event/show/70046[ August 2, 2019] Conference or similar: “What is philosophy about?” Metaphilosophy workshop with Stephen Yablohttps://philevents.org/event/show/69990
Venue: Universitätsstrasse 1<br /><br />https://philevents.org/event/show/69990[ October 2, 2019 - October 4, 2019] Conference or similar: Studia Logica Conference Trends in Logic19https://philevents.org/event/show/68910
Venue: Unknown<br /><br /><p>The 19th Trends in Logic international conference will be held in Moscow, Russia from October 2 to October 4, 2019. It is organized by the National Research University Higher School of Economics and the journal Studia Logica</p>
<p>We invite submissions presenting substantial recent advances in formal philosophical logic. The range of topics includes but is not limited to:</p>
<p>- modal logics,</p>
<p>- temporal logics,</p>
<p>- deontic logics,</p>
<p>- logics of agency,</p>
<p>- dynamic logics,</p>
<p>- epistemic and doxastic logics,</p>
<p>- formal epistemology,</p>
<p>- belief revision,</p>
<p>- substructural logics,</p>
<p>- relevance logics,</p>
<p>- paraconsistent logics,</p>
<p>- constructive logics,</p>
<p>- many-valued logics,</p>
<p>- non-monotonic logics,</p>
<p>- the paradoxes,</p>
<p>- theories of truth and falsity,</p>
<p>- natural language semantics,</p>
<p>- vagueness,</p>
<p>- applications of logical methods in philosophy.</p>
<p><strong>Paper submission:</strong></p>
<p>Abstracts of at most two pages length should be submitted electronically as pdf documents using the EasyChair submission page at <strong>https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=trends2019</strong></a></p>
<p>At least one author of each accepted paper must register for, and attend, the conference to present her or his work.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/68910[ October 30, 2019 - October 31, 2019] Conference or similar: The 5th IIFs Graduate Conferencehttps://philevents.org/event/show/70406
Venue: Circuito Maestro Mario de la Cueva<br /><br /><p>To be held on October 30-31st, 2019 at Mexico City</p>
<p>Keynote speaker:<br>Sherri Irvin, University of Oklahoma</p>
<p>We invite the submission of papers from graduate students on the following areas of analytic philosophy:</p>
<p>Metaphysics, Epistemology, Logic and its philosophy, Philosophy of language, Philosophy of science, Philosophy of mind and cognitive science, Ethics and metaethics, Political philosophy, Philosophy of law, Philosophy of art, History of philosophy</p>
<p>Submission information</p>
<p><br>-Deadline for submission: May 1st, 2019.</p>
<p>-Accepted papers will be announced no more than seven weeks after the deadline.</p>
<p>-Papers must be in English and not exceed 5000 words (excluding abstract and references).</p>
<p>-Authors must send two files: (i) the paper (including title, an abstract of no more than 250 words and keywords) prepared for blind review, and (ii) a file with the following information: author&rsquo;s name, affiliation, title of the paper and email. Files must be submitted in pdf format to .</p>
<p>-All papers will be double-blind peer reviewed. Accepted papers should be suitable for a thirty-minute presentation, which a graduate student from unam will reply.</p>
<p>-IFFs-UNAM offers to cover some of the accommodation expenses for accepted speakers.</p>https://philevents.org/event/show/70406